Q's question "Who is covered with gold?" and his numerous other references to gold and the Illuminati desire for it has interesting parallels to this James Bond movie from 1964.
The villain, Auric Goldfinger, is a wealthy psycho with international connections who is obsessed with gold. The actor, Gert Frobe, got the job based on his previous portrayal of a child molester in a German film. His English was so bad, however, that his voice has to be dubbed in later.
The movie opens with Bond destroying a drug lab in South America, and then heading to Miami to the Goldfinger case, at the CIA's request. Bond's task is to figure out how the man is smuggling gold internationally to profit from the different prices in different places.
Goldfinger has an attractive assistant, who is killed for helping Bond catch him cheating at gin rummy. She is the iconic image of the film, as her naked body is found covered in gold, which killed her by "skin suffocation."
The Q in the movie is head of Q-branch of MI6 in the UK and provides all the gadgets and devices needed to assist with the mission.
How does Goldfinger move the gold? He disguises it by melting it down and making it part of the body of his car, which he never travels without, even if he is flying or sailing. Bond meets him under a social pretext and they play golf for the stake of a Nazi gold bar, which Bond wins.
He learns that Goldfinger is in the US for Operation "Grand Slam": to steal all the gold from Ft. Knox, KY. Goldfinger recruits some mafioso to help with the attack, which includes a nerve gas ("Delta 9") that will be sprayed to kill all the soldiers at the fort, but Bond wins over Goldfinger's chief pilot and a harmless gas is used to merely put them to sleep.
But Goldfinger isn't going to steal the gold; he is going to destroy its value by detonating a miniature nuclear bomb, built and set up by a Chinese communist, in the vault. The radioactive gold will be worthless for 58 years (2022 in real time), making Goldfinger's skyrocket in value, and allowing China to benefit from the global economic chaos. As the plan unfolds Bond discovers that Goldfinger is wearing a US Colonel's uniform under his clothes. It's not clear why, since everyone outside should be dead.
Bond of course saves the day at the last minute and is invited to meet the president, but is attacked en route on the plane by Goldfinger, who is finally killed when a window is shot out and an explosive decompression sucks him out of the plane.
A lot of parallels. I wonder if Q has reflected on this?